We all remember La Vie au bout des doigts
(if you’re my age or over that is...), a documentary by Jean-Paul Janssen, featuring
Edlinger when he was not yet a legend. This film changed him into a real star in
France (forget climbing gear sponsors, French biscuits LU made millions using
his charisma). More importantly, climbing reached a wider audience thanks
to Edlinger.

It’s almost thirty
years since La vie au bout des doigts
was released ; thirty years since Edlinger became a legend ; thirty years since
climbers started to seriously promote climbing for all. For thirty years France
has seen climbing walls flourishing in city parks, schools, and even at
nurseries... Climbing walls for all! Nowadays, even the French leaving cert
candidates may choose climbing as sports exam - yes, we do have a sports exam
for the leaving cert, the so called “education physique et sportive”.

In 1985, surfing the
Edlinger wave, French climbers founded the French Climbing Fédération, who merged
with the French Mountaineering Fédération a few years later, to become the
FFME, a organisation who participated in the birth of the climbing World Cup and
who’s now campaigning for the integration of climbing in the Olympics.

And yet, thirty years
later, journalists keep talking about climbing “with bare hands”. It makes you
wonder if they do any investigation on the topic before writing their papers.